Mihal Grameno
Mihal Grameno (13 January 1871 – 5 February 1931) was an Albanian nationalist, politician, writer, freedom fighter, and journalist. He was one of the four initial appointed delegates from Korçë to the Albanian National Congress that proclaimed the Independence of Albania on 28 November 1912.
Mihal Grameno | |
Born | Korçë, Vilayet of Monastir, Ottoman Empire | 13 January 1871
Died | 5 February 1931 60) Korçë, Albania | (aged
Literary movement | Romanticism, Albanian National Awakening |
Notable awards | Hero of the People |
Biography
Mihal Grameno was born in Korçë[1] to a merchant family. He studied at the local secondary school before emigrating to Romania in 1885. It was in Bucharest where he got involved in the Albanian National Awakening where the movement soon collapsed due to financial reasons in the extended family who were dependent on money.
In 1907, he joined the newly formed Çerçiz Topulli's kachak band, an early guerrilla unit fighting against Turkish troops in Albania.[2] They were considered the Apostles of Albanianism and would go from village to village to discuss the Albanian predicament.
Turkish officials sent out military patrols to capture the bandits. The activity of the band consisted of only one battle in two years, when the 5 people band was surrounded by 150 Turkish units in Mashkullore. Four out of five escaped the encirclement. Other bands of this nature, not having a journalist in their company, such as Grameno have remained unsung heroes.
During the Young Turk Revolution (1908), Adjuntant Major Ahmed Niyazi Bey met with guerilla leaders Topulli and Grameno on July 23 in Resne (modern Resen) where he expressed his gratitude and viewed the declaration of the CUP constitution as advantageous for the Albanian nation.[3] Grameno alongside Topulli and Niyazi appeared in photographs taken by the Manakis brothers during the revolution.[4]
In 1909 Grameno founded in Korçë the Orthodox League (or Alliance) (Albanian: Lidhja Ortodokse) and served as editor of its periodical with the same name during 1909–1910. In 1910 the organization proclaimed the establishment of an independent Albanian church, and was unrecognized by the Ottoman Empire.[5] Grameno was arrested in 1910 by Ottoman authorities for his work with the newspaper Bashkimi i Kombit.[6]
During the upheavals of 1911, Grameno traveled as a go between for Albanian revolutionaries in Albanian inhabited lands and leaders of the Albanian national movement in Istanbul to coordinate armed activities against the Ottoman Empire.[7]
Mihal Grameno was one of the four initial appointed delegates from Korçë to the Albanian National Congress that proclaimed the Independence of Albania on 28 November 1912. Nevertheless, the Ottoman officials had created a communication blockade in Korçë, by preventing the telegram messages from being sent in and out of town.[8][9] Grameno and his compatriots Menduh Zavalani, Stavro Karoli and Estref Vërleni learned later about the Independence Congress and reached Vlorë after five days,[10] while they were substituted during the first day of the Congress by Pandeli Cale, Thanas Floqi and Spiridon Ilo.[8]
After independence, Grameno served as the editor of the weekly Koha (Time), initially published in Korçë and later in Jamestown, New York, where he lived from 1915 to 1919. He traveled back to Europe to represent Albania through the Albanian-American community at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 and in the following year he returned in Albania.
In the 1920s he carried out his journalistic and literary activities until he retired from public life due to ill health. Resigned and seriously ill, he died on February 5, 1931 in Korçë.
Works
Mihal Grameno's published works include:[11]
- Vdekja (The Death), a patriotic poem published in 1903;
- Mallkimi i gjuhës shqipe, (The curse upon the Albanian language), a comedy published in Bucharest 1905,
- Vdekja e Piros (The Death of Pyrrhus), a historical tragedy published in Sofia, 1906.
- Oxhaku (The Hearth), E puthura (The Kiss), and Varr' i pagëzimit (The Tomb of the Baptism), Korçë 1909, short stories.
- Plagët (The wounds) Manastir 1912, a volume of poetry;
- Kryengritja shqiptare, Korçë 1925 (The Albanian Uprising), memoirs of his experiences as a guerrilla fighter against the Turkish and Greek troops.
References
- Blumi 2011, p. 21.
- Skendi 1967, pp. 207, 210-211, 421.
- Skendi 1967, p. 341.
- Blumi, Isa (2011). Reinstating the Ottomans, Alternative Balkan Modernities: 1800–1912. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 4, 6. ISBN 9780230119086.
- Blumi 2001, pp. 19.
- Skendi 1967, p. 407.
- Skendi 1967, p. 401.
- Meksi, Aleksandër (October 18, 2012). "Kuvendi i Vlorës, pjesëmarrësit dhe firmëtarët e Aktit të Pavarësisë". Hylli i Dritës. Botime Franceskane (3).
25) Qeveritarët turk të Korçës nuk i dorëzonin Parisë së qytetit telegramet që vinin nga Vlora dhe as dërgonin atje telegramet që Paria i dërgonte organizatorëve të Kuvendit. Ata u njoftuan me tepër vonesë që Kuvendi po zhvillonte punimet dhe se u shpall Pavarësia. Në fakt delegatët e caktuar ishin Mihal Grameno, Menduh Zavalani, Stavro Karoli dhe Estref Verlemi. Falënderojmë Niko Kotheren për këtë informacion që ne e gjykojmë me mjaft vlerë.
- Meksi, Aleksandër (December 2, 2016). "Kuvendi i Vlorës, pjesëmarrësit dhe firmëtarët e Aktit të Pavarësisë, studim nga Aleksandër Meksi" (in Albanian). Radi and Radi. Archived from the original on November 7, 2017. Retrieved October 17, 2017.
Në fakt delegatët e caktuar ishin Mihal Grameno, Menduh Zavalani, Stavro Karoli dhe Estref Verlemi.(The appointed delegates were, in fact Mihal Grameno, Menduh Zavalani, Stavro Karoli and Estref Verlemi.)
- Zavalani, Mikel (1983). "Menduh (Dume) Zavalani (1889-1914)". Studime Historike 2 (in Albanian). 2: 190. Retrieved November 28, 2020.
Në fakt ata mbrritën në Vlorë pesë ditë pas ngritjes së flamurit.
- Hoerder&Harzig 1987, pp. 474.
Sources
- Lloshi, Xhevat (2008). Rreth Alfabetit te Shqipes [Around the Albanian Alphabet]. Logos. ISBN 9789989582684.
- Skendi, Stavro (1967). The Albanian national awakening. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400847761.
- Blumi, Isa (2001). "Teaching Loyalty in the Late Ottoman Balkans: Educational Reform in the Vilayets of Manastir and Yanya, 1878–1912". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 21 (1–2): 15–23. doi:10.1215/1089201x-21-1-2-15.
- Hoerder, Dirk; Harzig, Christiane (1987). The Immigrant Labor Press in North America, 1840s–1970s: An Annotated Bibliography: Volume 2: Migrants from Eastern and Southeastern Europe 031326077X. ISBN 9780313260773. Retrieved June 3, 2010.